News – HARTS (Humanities and Arts) Initiative /harts Thu, 05 Feb 2026 19:10:24 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 Flamenco performer Elena Villa shares dance and culture with Humanities 100 students /harts/2026/02/05/flamenco-performer-elena-villa-shares-dance-and-culture-with-humanities-100-students/ Thu, 05 Feb 2026 19:10:24 +0000 /harts/?p=3022 In Humanities 100, students travel through time from Mesopotamia to Greece and Europe and across the Americas, exploring the academic disciplines collectively known as the humanities. These subjects include art history, literature, history, film, music, philosophy, religion, and theater. As we travel, we consider the age-old question: “What does it mean to live a good and meaningful life?”

We read the Epic of Gilgamesh and talk about the quest for immortality. We read Plato’s “Allegory of the Cave,” considering the “cave” that each of us lives in as well as our potential for getting out. We read ԳپDzԱand discuss the role of social protest in living a meaningful life. We visit the Portland Art Museum and observe the way artists give shape to their experiences in the world.

On November 25, 2025, our class of 18 students had the pleasure of hosting Elena Villa, professional Flamenco dancer and Сèý English instructor, who helped us dive more deeply into our exploration. Villa shared the rich and varied cultural history of Flamenco, a UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage, and the ways this art form has helped people document their lives, preserve cultural narratives and traditions, and make meaning of the full range of their experiences for centuries.

a Flamenco dancer with dark hair and a white dress performing

Elena spoke in particular about the transformational possibilities of Flamenco in the context of the ܱԻ,about which Federico Garcia Lorca wrote: “The duende….Where is the duende? Through the empty archway a wind of the spirit enters, blowing insistently over the heads of the dead, in search of new landscapes and unknown accents: a wind with the odour of a child’s saliva, crushed grass, and medusa’s veil, announcing the endless baptism of freshly created things.” She also shared her personal connections to Flamenco in particular and dance in general—something she was first exposed to by her father in the 1970s.

By the end of the visit, students had a much deeper understanding of this art form, its surrounding culture, and its ability to help people shape and make meaning of their lives.

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Student Photography Exhibition Opens in Mt. Scott Hall /harts/2026/02/05/student-photography-exhibition-opens-in-mt-scott-hall/ Thu, 05 Feb 2026 19:06:44 +0000 /harts/?p=3018 Two sections of the ESOL Level 6 Academic Communication course teamed up on Monday, December 1, 2025, for a photography project that transformed a hallway in Mt. Scott Hall of the Southeast campus into a temporary art gallery.

Twenty-two students, guided by instructors Lara Mendicino and Tim Krause, spent time exploring Southeast with cellphone cameras in hand. Their assignment: slow down, look closely, and capture aspects of campus life and culture that are often overlooked in the daily rush to class and work.

Students returned with images ranging from the unusual to the unexpectedly familiar, often seen from new angles. While many students captured images of nature, others focused on art, architecture, and even the signs. Each participant selected one photograph to feature and wrote a short interpretation in English—which, for many, is a second, third, or even fourth language—before making an audio recording to explain the image’s significance.

images from Picture Сèý, an exhibit of student photography

Using HARTS funding, Mendicino and Krause produced 8×10 color prints of each photograph and generated individual QR codes linking to the students’ recordings. The finished works were installed as an exhibit along the second-floor hallway bulletin boards in Mt. Scott Hall, where they will remain on display through at least the end of Winter 2026. Publication of the exhibit was sent via email to instructors, staff, and administrators of the SE ESOL department. Several instructors have expressed interest in taking their classes to see the exhibit.

The exhibit invites the hundreds, even thousands, of visitors who pass through the building to pause, look, and listen. Hearing students describe their own images in their own voices can spark reflection and conversation not only about the art itself but also about the cultures, languages, and lived experiences that make up the Сèý community.

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Composer and Scholar Molly Joyce Visits Сèý’s Digital Arts and Equity Class /harts/2026/02/05/composer-and-scholar-molly-joyce-visits-pccs-digital-arts-and-equity-class/ Thu, 05 Feb 2026 19:02:56 +0000 /harts/?p=3015 On October 27, 2025, students in Music & Sonic Arts 218: Digital Arts & Equity welcomed a special guest: composer, performer, and scholar Molly Joyce, whose work explores the intersections of music, technology, and disability studies.

composer Molly Joyce visits a Сèý music course

More than 50 students attended the session led by Dr. Ravi Kittappa and engaged in an energetic discussion about Joyce’s creative practice and research. Drawing from her background as an artist who composes and performs with an adapted electric toy organ, Joyce shared how her experiences with physical difference inform her art and her philosophy of “access as aesthetic.” Her talk highlighted the ways that technology can serve as a tool for inclusion, empowerment, and new modes of creative expression.

Students asked wide-ranging questions that connected Joyce’s work to the course’s core themes—how digital tools shape identity, how access influences artistic innovation, and how the arts can model more equitable forms of participation. “It was one of the liveliest and most inspiring sessions of the term,” said Dr. Kittappa. “Molly’s perspective resonated deeply with students, showing them that technology and identity are not opposing forces but creative partners.”

The visit underscored Сèý’s commitment to bringing diverse voices into the classroom and fostering dialogue between artistic practice, scholarship, and social justice.

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ART 217 at Books with Pictures Con /harts/2025/10/08/art-217-at-books-with-pictures-con/ Wed, 08 Oct 2025 19:49:34 +0000 /harts/?p=2952 Сèý students tabling at Books with Pictures Con

On Saturday, June 7, students from ART 217: Comics Art and Literature concluded the term by attending and tabling at (BwPCon) in Portland, Oregon. The event made their coursework more tangible and provided real-world engagement with the wider comics community.

During the Spring term, students in ART 217 focused on graphic adaptations, examining how existing narratives, histories, and biographies are reinterpreted through the medium of comics. They closely studied Eileen Gray: A House Under the Sun, Days of Sand, and Kusama: The Graphic Novel, using these texts to inspire their own visual storytelling efforts. Each week, the class also produced physical, handmade micro-comics in the form of one-sheet folded zines. In preparation for BwPCon, the 20-person cohort  revised and printed their comics to share with the public, which gave them a chance to talk about the value and accessibility of this medium.

comics made by students in ART 217

The day of the convention, ART 217 students took turns tabling in two-hour shifts. Not only did they distribute more than 400 comics, but they also chatted with curious attendees and taught some folks the fold-and-cut zine technique.

“I couldn’t be more proud of how our students showed up—both professionally and creatively. As an instructor, witnessing this level of engagement was moving. This wasn’t just an academic exercise; it was a real-world entry point into a larger dialogue about comics as a serious and vibrant cultural form,” said instructor Jay Olinger.

To see more student work from ART 217, .

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Sonic interface designer Dillon Simeone visits MUC 262 /harts/2025/04/21/sonic-interface-designer-dillon-simeone-visits-muc-262/ Tue, 22 Apr 2025 00:58:34 +0000 /harts/?p=2864 Dillon Simeone is an deaf audio engineer, electronics engineer, and designer working with (UMD) team at , a local nonprofit whose mission is to enhance arts and culture accessibility for the Deaf and Hard of Hearing (DHH).

Dillon visited Сèý’s MUC 262: Interface Design class on March 3 to share his approach to interface design and iterative design for the DHH community.

MUC 262 is a second-year course in the Associate Degree for Creative Coding and Immersive Technology, which is part of our Music and Sonic Arts Program. It is an advanced class where students study user/human centered design techniques and work in a hands-on way to build new, innovative interfaces for controlling sound, light, and video.

Simeone’s process and technical advice expertise was a fascinating masterclass in human centered design, and was coupled with a table full of innovative sound and light objects designed for DHH musicians.

students examine technology designed for deaf and hard of hearing musiciansStudents got to do some hands-on exploration with GeLu, a new instrument for deaf musicians presented at the 2024 , among many other inventions. GeLu combines two bracelets – one with gesture sensing and haptic feedback plus another with LED color feedback – to help users visualize audio data synchronized with sound.

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Curator Visits Art History Students for Q&A /harts/2025/03/13/art-curator-visits-art-history-students-for-qa/ Thu, 13 Mar 2025 17:21:10 +0000 /harts/?p=2848 An art curator visits Сèý students for a lecture through Zoom On February 7, 2024, students from ART210: Women in Art hosted a lecture and Q&A session with Laurel V. McLaughlin, Curator and Director of the Collective Futures Fund for Tufts University Art Galleries in Boston, Mass. Laurel recently curated an exhibition here in Portland at Oregon Contemporary near Сèý Cascade.

In the Zoom lecture, “Curating as Conduction,” Laurel introduced the students to the exhibition “: .” She also gave an overview of her career trajectory as an art curator and took questions from the students about professional goals in the arts. After the talk, students hopped on the MAX to make a visit to .

One student wrote that “Laurel spoke about her educational background, previous internships and positions, and exhibits she’s worked on, presentations given, but what I found to be most remarkable was her drive to create more equity in the art world. I learned of the wage disparity between [arts] workers and . . . her work with undocumented women. Going into the exhibit with her values in mind, my expectations were exceeded by Waste Scenes, which tells a story about the effects of neoliberal capitalism using multiple mediums of art.”

Art history students send a big thanks to HARTS Fund supporters for the opportunity to chat with a professional in the art world.

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Percussionist Rohan Krishnamurthy Visits Sonic Construction of Identity Class /harts/2025/02/12/percussionist-rohan-krishnamurthy-visits-sonic-construction-of-identity-class/ Wed, 12 Feb 2025 20:03:01 +0000 /harts/?p=2840 Dr. Rohan Krishnamurthy, an internationally acclaimed Carnatic percussionist, made a much-anticipated return to Dr. Ravi Kittappa’s Sonic Construction of Identity class, bringing with him a wealth of musical knowledge, cultural insights, and personal reflections. Supported by HARTS, this visit built upon his previous engagement with the class last year, offering students another opportunity to engage deeply with the traditions, innovations, and identity formations within South Indian classical music.

Dr. Krishnamurthy’s visit came on the heels of his recent tour in Chennai, India, where he performed as part of the world-renowned Chennai Music Season, an annual festival that gathers the finest musicians in the Carnatic tradition. As a highly respected mridangam artist, composer, and scholar, his perspective provided a unique window into the evolving global landscape of Carnatic music. His visit sparked thought-provoking discussions on the intersections of tradition, modernity, and identity in the performance and transmission of classical music.

Throughout the session, Dr. Krishnamurthy engaged with students in an open and dynamic exchange. Their questions spanned a range of topics, from the technical nuances of mridangam playing to broader considerations of how Carnatic music functions in diasporic and contemporary settings. He responded in detail, often drawing from personal experiences and offering insights into the ways in which rhythm, improvisation, and pedagogy shape both his practice and his understanding of identity.

A highlight of his discussion was his tribute to his guru, the legendary mridangam maestro Guruvayur Dorai, who was recently honored with the prestigious Padma Shri award—one of India’s highest civilian honors. Dr. Krishnamurthy spoke at length about Guruvayur Dorai’s immense contributions to the field of Carnatic percussion, his impact on generations of musicians, and the deep influence he has had on his own artistic and academic journey. He reflected on the rigorous yet profoundly enriching guru-shishya (teacher-disciple) tradition, emphasizing the importance of oral transmission, embodied learning, and the lifelong process of musical refinement.

Beyond the technical and historical aspects of Carnatic music, Dr. Krishnamurthy also touched upon his own interdisciplinary work, which bridges performance, ethnomusicology, and music technology. His ability to move fluidly between tradition and innovation resonated with the themes of Dr. Kittappa’s class, which explores sound as a means of constructing and negotiating identity. Students were particularly intrigued by his thoughts on the ways in which Carnatic percussion continues to evolve in response to changing social, cultural, and technological contexts.

As the session came to a close, it was evident that Dr. Krishnamurthy’s visit had left a lasting impact on the students. His ability to articulate the complexities of identity through rhythm and sound provided an invaluable perspective on the fluidity of musical traditions and the ongoing dialogue between past and present. His return to the class underscored the importance of sustained engagement with artists and scholars whose work challenges and enriches conventional understandings of music and identity.

Dr. Kittappa and his students expressed their gratitude for Dr. Krishnamurthy’s generosity in sharing his time, experiences, and deep passion for music. His visit was a reminder of the profound ways in which sound constructs, reflects, and transforms identity—both for those who create it and for those who listen.

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Carolyn Moore Reading Series + Open Mic: Jane Wong and Steve Chang /harts/2025/02/09/carolyn-moore-reading-series-open-mic-jane-wong-steve-chang/ Mon, 10 Feb 2025 00:34:37 +0000 /harts/?p=2835 An invitation graphic to the March 7th reading and open mic, featuring images of writers Jane Wong and Steve ChangGet your poems or one-page prose pieces/excerpts ready – this term’s Open Mic is coming up! The night will begin with our featured readers, the two March residents of Сèý’s Carolyn Moore Writing Residency: , author of two fantastic poetry collections and the recent memoir Meet Me Tonight in Atlantic City, and , a fiction writer and editor from San Gabriel, California. After the two featured writers, we’ll open the mic to the Сèý and Portland literary community to read a poem or a page of prose – we look forward to cheering you on.

  • When: Friday, March 7, sign-ups at 6:30pm, readings starting at 7pm
  • Where: Cascade Campus, Terrell Hall 122
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Art history students visit Leonora Carrington exhibition /harts/2025/01/30/art-history-students-visit-leonora-carrington-exhibition/ Thu, 30 Jan 2025 22:53:02 +0000 /harts/?p=2832 On October 9, 2024, students from ART210: Women in Art visited “” at the Oregon Jewish Museum and Center for Holocaust Education in Portland’s Pearl District to look at lithographic prints by Surrealist artist Leonora Carrington that depict costume designs for S. Ansky’s play The Dybbuk. Students were able to observe works of art face-to-face, to practice visual analysis of the images, and to learn about Carrington’s artistic practice influenced by her British heritage, World War II and her Jewish partners, and her life in Mexico.

One student wrote that Leonora Carrington’s “work offers escapism and adventure to the viewer.” In reflecting on the depiction of gender in Carrington’s prints, another student wrote, “The female figures in The Magic World by Leonara Carrington were depicted as beautiful and true integral characters of a make believe society. . . . Given this, it’s a well reasoned assumption that [art critic] Carol Duncan would appreciate how the female-like figures . . . are portrayed in a positive light. [Carrington’s] examples show how female artists have reclaimed the use of female imagery as a way to drive wholesome associations with women.” And, another student reflected, “Leonora Carrington . . . portrayed women in empowered, mythical roles. Her surrealist approach with dreamlike figures and vivid color schemes challenged conventional portrayals of women as objects.”

A group of smiling students making heart symbols with their handsFor further reading about Leonora Carrington’s series of 11 lithographic prints from 1974 illustrating costume designs for S. Ansky’s play The Dybbuk, see Matt Stromberg’s Hyperallergic article ““

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Flamenco Dancer, Elena Villa, Visits Humanities Class /harts/2024/11/25/flamenco-dancer-elena-villa-visits-humanities-class/ Tue, 26 Nov 2024 01:30:06 +0000 /harts/?p=2824 Fresh off a trip through Spain where she participated in Flamenco workshops, Flamenco Artist and Сèý Writing Instructor, Elena Villa visited Humanities 100 at Sylvania Campus to share the rich history and cultural significance of this UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage. She spoke to a class of ten students about the history of Flamenco, it’s complex cultural heritage and its ongoing impact throughout the world. In addition to sharing about her own journey as a dancer, Elena led the class in a series of clapping exercises that demonstrated the complexity and richness of Flamenco rhythms. Finally, she touched the idea of “duende,” the “mysterious power” and heightened sense of emotion that Federico García Lorca wrote about and is commonly discussed in relationship to Flamenco Elena Villa Flamenco

In the context of the larger class discussions around the powerful ways that the arts and humanities can help people find meaning in the world, the students walked away with a palpable sense of the ways Flamenco uniquely supports this possibility.

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Elena’s visit was generously funded by the Сèý HARTS Fund, which supports programming and scholarships that increases student access to the arts and humanities. To donate to the HARTS Fund, please go to the donation page and choose “Other” in the designation form. Then enter “HARTS” in the box that appears.

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